It takes a lot of skill to write gothic stories without them sounding ham or predictable. I’ve tried a few and never been satisfied with the way I manage transitions or plant the seeds of doubt. A lot of stories in this genre are a bit too obvious. There’s also a bit of a tendency to stick to the traditions, keep with the old tropes, write in a particular, style, often more or less a pastiche of the old masters of the genre like MR James. There is one such story in Helen Grant’s excellent collection, The Sea Change and Other Stories, but that’s quite intentional, as we shall see.
There are seven stories in The Sea Change, and they are admirably
varied in location, subject matter and style. The writing is cool and
controlled, drawing the reader into the particular worldview of each story,
spinning the central mystery around them and drawing them towards
a series of satisfying denouements.
The first story, set in an unidentified German town, revolves around a song which gives the story its title, “Grauer Hans” and features a young girl as a narrator. What she doesn’t understand but somehow intuits, and of course we can see quite clearly, is that she is in some jeopardy, cloistered in her small, upper-floor bedroom with window looking out onto the rooftops of the town. Terror is visited and then revisited. Decidedly eerie.
There is a complete change of style for the second story,
the title story of the collection, “The Sea Change”. The author draws on her
knowledge of scuba diving for a tale that is truly creepy, with some
beautifully (by which I mean horribly) descriptive writing and an ending that
is inevitable but still unsettling.
The next story, “The Game of Bear”, is the one I alluded to
at the beginning, when I said one story was written in the style of the turn of
the early twentieth-century experts in the genre. What I didn’t realise until I’d
finished was that this was a prize-winning entry completing an unfinished work
by MR James himself. The first 1700 words or so were his, the remainder the
author’s. I didn’t see the join. Helen Grant convincingly pulls together the
strands of James’s original puzzle in a way that feels completely unforced. An
impressive feat.
“Self Catering” is a brief and humorous slice of almost whimsical
horror. It’s essentially Mr Benn Goes Horribly Wrong and is tremendous fun.
We shift next to “Nathair Dubh”, a story centred on
rock-climbing. The rock in question, of course, has a reputation for strangeness, and an eerie
mist that descends on the climbers portends trouble. Trouble duly arrives.
“Alberic de MaulĂ©on” is another MR James-related competition
entry, this time to write a sequel to a James story, in this case “Canon
Alberic’s Scrapbook”. This is set in the late seventeenth century and there is
a very fine sense of place and time here. The inhospitable cold of the time,
the life-threatening harshness of the era, is brilliantly conjured and the
story’s twist is effectively engineered.
The last story, “The Calvary at Banksá Bystrica”, is
probably my favourite, if only because although the mystery is perfectly laid
out, it refuses to reveal itself totally. It is set in Slovakia and is based on
a real place which the author visited and which she renders in vivid detail.
Some of the descriptive writing in this story is truly excellent, creepy beyond
measure but finely controlled.
This is a highly recommended collection, published in a good quality paperback edition by The Swan River Press. Seek it out. It’s worth it.
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